Homeschool Index Card Uses

1. Bible Study Outlines

2. Timelines

I made my first Index Card Timeline 20 years ago when I first started homeschooling. I used color codes for eras. On the front had the timeline, dates and an image, on the back the brief description of event. We made a few games using these and put them on the wall.

Our current Bible timeline is purchased.I used index cards to list the 12 Bible Eras. The Books of the Bible chart has strings running to the Bible stories to show where the story can be found in the Bible.

I purchased a TN timeline at a local teacher store. I added index cards citing important world events during the same periods.

3. Easy Lapbook Booklets

Make quick and easy booklets for lapbook lessons with colored index cards! Fold in half for Q & A booklet, staple several together for a booklet, decorate the cover with scrapbook embellishments. You can also make accordion booklets, pocket books, match books and more. Visit HomeschoolSharefor tons of lapbook and booklet ideas and templates.

4. Memory verses

Have students write their memory verse 5 times on 5 cards (practicing handwriting) the place the cards in prominent areas around the house. Writing the verse helps cement it into memory.

5. Prayer list

Encourage each child to have their own ongoing prayer list (crossing out answered prayers). This is a super opportunity to teach your child the importance of praying. Have them pray for family, neighbors, and friends, etc. Each day, many parents send their kids out into the world without lifting them up to God, your child can be praying for them.

6. Book Record/Bookmark

Index cards make great bookmarks — students can write out the title, author and publication date at the top of an index card. write notes about the book on the card. When finish the book, drop the index card into a file box and have an ongoing record of your reading.

Index cards and sticky notes operate like the playing cards, counters and other game components: they make it easy to sort, shuffle, arrange and rearrange information– they bring logic and order to a space, allowing it to serve as a base for exploring combinatorial possibilities. — Dave Gray, “Why games?”

You can make a matching game for almost any subject. Make separate cards for the questions and the answers, leaving the back sides blank. Place the cards face down and turn them over, one by one, trying to find matches.

8. Vocabulary Cards

Have students write vocabulary word on the side with no lines and the definition of the vocabulary word on the side with lines. When studying they should make a small check mark on the corner of they know. When they have made two or three marks on a card, they can put it in a separate pile. They should go through the main pile until all cards have two or three marks.

9. Homeschool Assignments

I use the Workbox system to organize our homeschool schedule. The boys each have 12 workboxes. They comple box #1 then move to #2 and so on. Some boxes contain a worksheet, reading book, workbook, or work with mom note. I use index cards to jot down notes like “Read a book form the science center.” I save these to use on future days. When I need ideas as what to put in the box I can flip through the cards in the index card box for ideas.

10. More Index Card Uses

OK, I couldn’t stop at 10.

Outline a book- all mine books began as index cards (color code chapters)

Create a Personal PDA- Merlin Mann. coined the term Hipster PDA as a paper-based personal organizer. The Hipster PDA is simply a bunch of index cards held together with a binder clip. Although it began as a joke it is true index cards are incredibly useful cheap, lightweight, free-form organizer that doesn’t need batteries and is unlikely to be stolen.

About Robin Sampson

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23 comments

We like to buy boxes of blank business cards for uses such as what you’ve described. They are the perfect size for making your own card games and cards for homemade board games. We use them a lot for hands-on math activities too.

Great ideas. I love index cards! I recently listened to a podcast and the speaker encourage her listeners to carry bible verses with them to ‘give away’ to others to encourage them. Thought that might be a good use for all those extra memory verse cards:)

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